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Synonyms

cattish

American  
[kat-ish] / ˈkæt ɪʃ /

adjective

  1. catlike; feline.

  2. spiteful; malicious.


Other Word Forms

  • cattishly adverb
  • cattishness noun

Etymology

Origin of cattish

First recorded in 1590–1600; cat ( def. ) + -ish 1

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

His deviousness, clowning and attention-seeking have something fittingly and convincingly cattish about them.

From The Guardian • Jan. 6, 2011

Penelope is "the sly cattish wife," Odysseus "that cold-blooded egotist," Telemachus "the priggish son who yet met his master-prig in Menelaus."

From Time Magazine Archive

If only I could retaliate in kind, couldn't I be cattish?

From The Lightning Conductor Discovers America by Williamson, C. N. (Charles Norris)

Abominably cattish of the widow not to ask me.

From Beyond The Rocks A Love Story by Glyn, Elinor

Putting in his hand, he is dragging out bones, feathers, skeleton musk-rats, putrid frogs, promiscuous remnants of other quarries brought to the burrow by the mink, when a little cattish s-p-i-t! almost touches his hand.

From The Story of the Trapper by Laut, A. C.